I’m sitting in the Grand Ballroom at the JW Marriot (filled to capacity) and listening to Tucker Carlson give his thoughts on likely GOP challengers to the President. I’ve seen him before – he did a great bit with Paul Begala a few years ago at the MBA in San Diego; very likable and very, very funny (told a great story about receiving a call from Donald Trump that I don’t think I can reprint here). His early pick for the Republican nominee is New Jersey’s Chris Christie.Continue Reading CREFC Day 2: Tucker Carlson, Chuck Schumer and Dodd-Frank
CREFC Day 1: Penn Avenue Freeze Out
The industry descended on our Nation’s Capital this morning for the 2011 CREFC conference: "Commercial Lending: The New World Order". It was -2 at Logan when my shuttle took to the air – needless to say I’m more than happy for the opportunity to spend a few days with friends, clients and colleagues in a warmer climate. (Current DC temperature is 24 degrees – not quite Stone Crabs at Joe’s, but I’ll take what I can get.) Continue Reading CREFC Day 1: Penn Avenue Freeze Out
Ibanez Foreclosure Decision a Concern for Massachusetts Lenders
In a widely-covered slip opinion issued late last week, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts denied two securitization trustees’ requests to quiet title with respect to a pair of foreclosed homes. Press reaction was fast and perhaps a touch too furious – CNN Money hailed the Court giving “banks a ‘beat-down’ over foreclosures”, while Reuters used the word “catastrophe”. The Journal saw the decision as a “setback” – probably the more sober analysis (which isn’t meant to downplay the importance of the Ibanez decision – lots of uneasy servicers will be scrubbing mortgage loan files in the coming months). But the decision itself is not, from a Massachusetts’ lawyer’s perspective, terribly surprising and, in fact, could actually be read to ratify certain practices common in securitized lending.Continue Reading Ibanez Foreclosure Decision a Concern for Massachusetts Lenders
What Are We Still Waiting For and When Should it Arrive?
I have a Leapster Explorer™ on order for my son’s 5th birthday that I seriously hope arrives in the next two days, but in addition to that delivery, there’s a lot of securitization-related rulemaking required or permitted to be delivered under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act that was enacted on July 21, 2010 (“Dodd-Frank”).
Fewer than half of the rulemaking provisions in Dodd-Frank specify when the required or permitted rule should be issued or go into effect. Some of the Dodd-Frank rulemaking provisions require multiple agencies to issue rules jointly, some provisions require multiple agencies to issue rules separately, several provisions require that rules be issued by one agency in consultation with another agency… Some rulemaking deadlines are based on date of enactment of Dodd-Frank (July 21, 2010), others on the effective date (July 22, 2010, except as otherwise specifically provided in Dodd-Frank).
Below is a discussion about where we are in connection with some of the Dodd-Frank provisions that are of particular interest to the securitization industry.
Continue Reading What Are We Still Waiting For and When Should it Arrive?
Happy 2011 for Mezzanine Lenders?
My New Year began this past Monday morning with the following email from a client (a Giants fan): "Now that football season is over it’s time to get back to work". Not quite right for those of us here in New England, but I agree overall with the sentiment (albeit, with this year’s blizzard of year-end deals, not all of us were ever too far removed). Amid last week’s understandably slow news cycle appeared a story in Bloomberg on the growing desire in the private equity sphere for CRE mezz debt. Indeed, the stars seem to be aligning in a way that could mark 2011 as the beginning of a bull market for CRE mezz investors.
Continue Reading Happy 2011 for Mezzanine Lenders?
Animal Spirits and Limits of Memory
While perhaps akin to stories of sixteen foot gators in the New York sewer system, I have heard that there is a physiological basis for suppressing the more painful memories of childbirth which is the species’ way of ensuring that couples have more than one child. Perhaps a similar thing is affecting investors and market participants to allow animal spirits to be rekindled this January.
Oh, I think it’s fair to say that there were precious few animal spirits in January ’08 and ’09 and we were all a bit fluttery at the beginning of 2010, but I think we’ve put the worst memories of the last 3 years’ unpleasantness behind us and appear intent on enjoying the delightful frisson of booming times once again.
Continue Reading Animal Spirits and Limits of Memory
Seven Year Cycles and Five Month Memories
Leading with the good news, the commercial mortgage finance market is back and growing at a brisk pace. From a few standalones in the fourth quarter of 2009, we’ve gotten to a remarkable place. Even during the first half of 2010, while lenders were hesitantly starting to lend, precious few lenders actually had real balance sheet availability for securitization. That changed. We’re back!
Almost as soon as these markets began to function again, complaints about the quality of the loans began to bubble up. OK, LTVs remain modest and, broadly, we’re not underwriting pro forma income, but structural rigor and simplicity did not long endure. Give me a break. The joke has always been that our business had a seven year cycle and five year memories so that once in every cycle we’d recapitulate the errors of the last. But five months?Continue Reading Seven Year Cycles and Five Month Memories
Fa la la la la, la la, OLA
Another item to add to the growing list of possible unintended consequences of financial reform in connection with ABS: Section 210(a)(11) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the “Reform Act”)—Avoidable Transfers.
Here’s the who, what, where, when, why and how ABS are affected.
WHO? A “covered financial company” of which the FDIC becomes the liquidating receiver. Under the Reform Act, a “covered financial company” is a “financial company” as to which a “systemic risk determination” (such financial company is deemed to pose a significant risk to the financial stability of the U.S. upon its failure) has been made by the Secretary of the U.S. Treasury in consultation with the President. Entities most likely to be affected are non-bank “financial companies,” bank holding companies, and non-bank U.S. subsidiaries of either– if such subsidiary is in a financial business. An insured depository institution cannot be a “covered financial company.”
Continue Reading Fa la la la la, la la, OLA
Midnight Train to Boston: Dechert Speaks at IMN in NYC
I’m writing from Pennsylvania Station on a particularly bad day for our national rail service (Amtrak) – apparently the heavy rains and gusts wreaked havoc with electrical wires running both North and South, delaying (or cancelling) every Acela, Keystone, Silver Meteor, Silver Star and Vermonter scheduled to leave our country’s busiest transport hub. The (woefully underrated) holiday movie Love Actually opens with Hugh Grant’s musing that when faced with the general gloominess of the world he considers the smiles of arriving Heathrow passengers as they greet their waiting loved ones. On this first day of December and first night of Hanukkah, however, I’m fearful that Mr. Grant would be sorely disappointed in the zeitgeist of the half-million or so travelers looking to depart for Stamford and Boston, Philadelphia and DC and the balance of the Northeast Corridor.Continue Reading Midnight Train to Boston: Dechert Speaks at IMN in NYC
Bring on the Substitutions
“Collateral”, “Collateral Substitution”, CMBS, IRS, PSA, Regulations, REMIC, “REMIC Amendments”, Servicer, “Servicing Standard”, Substitution…
Continue Reading Bring on the Substitutions